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You’re the Economist

You’re the Economist. People Not Property. Property rights are the rights of human beings to freely use and transfer their possessions, including themselves. Property Rights ARE Human Rights. Importance of Property Rights to Economic Growth and to the Well-being of the Poor.

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You’re the Economist

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  1. You’re the Economist

  2. People Not Property Property rights are the rights of human beings to freely use and transfer their possessions, including themselves. Property Rights ARE Human Rights

  3. Importance of Property Rights to Economic Growth and to the Well-being of the Poor Para, Brazil Amazon Basin

  4. Focusing the Research: The Role of Property Rights in Reducing Poverty We KNOW: • Economic growth is the key to reducing absolute poverty and raising standards of living. • One source of economic growth is increased productivity, the ability to increase output per unit of resource input. • Productivity is increased through investment in human and physical capital • People invest in their human capital by getting education, training, or experience. • Investment in physical capital includes developing and/or purchasing the buildings, machines, and equipment that make human labor more productive. • People take better care of things they own. Property rights act as an incentive for people to protect the value of their possessions.

  5. Generally We WANT to know: • Are property rights a tool in fighting poverty? • Does the existence of strong property rights promote economic growth? • Does clear title to land encourage (act as an incentive for) capital investment? Specifically Research Question: On the Amazonian frontier of Brazil, are landholders with title more or less likely than landholders without clear title to invest in capital improvements to their land?

  6. Ricardo’s Journal • June 01, 1993 11:49 a.m. Fax to Dr. Lee Alston and Dr. Gary Libecap • The travel to São Felix was not too bad as I expected. We went on the back of a pick-up truck, and although crowded (13 people, 2 kids and two chickens on the truck and 4 people on the cabin) it was better than a bus. . . .

  7. Ricardo’s Journal • To get a better sample, I choose to survey the colony in the two opposite extremes. One 4 minutes down river from town (Santa Rosa) and other 5 hours upriver (Chadazinho). About half people I surveyd had definitive land tittle, but only a few are registered . . . and only few are in the name of landholder. Usually, the tittle is on name of the previous holder (i.e. when the previous owner sold the land, he gave as well the tittle). Sometimes the farmers got also a power of attorney paper, sometimes not. Registering the tittle and transferring is very expensive and this is the reason people usually do not do it.

  8. Survey Data

  9. The number of hectares the farmer cleared since he became the landholder. (Land cleared by a previous owner is not included.) 1 hectare = ~2.5 acres, or 2.5 football fields. Yes – The settler has a clear and legally recognized title to the land and the title would be upheld in a court of law. Converting land to pasture required logging out the trees, and/or removing stumps and rocks, and/or seeding to create suitable grazing for cattle. Landholders could maintain livestock for their own use without much fencing. Raising cattle for market required fencing. NO - The settler has no claim to the land other than occupancy (squatter), or his claim is uncertain. For example, the settler holds a signed receipt from a previous owner, or the settler has a provisional title which hasn’t been registered. Permanent crops are usually tree crops such as bananas, coffee, and cocoa. Several years’ growth is required before they bear a significant crop. However, in the long run, they tend to be more valuable than annual crops (which are planted each year).

  10. Identifying Investment YES YES NO NO NO ??? YES YES

  11. Calculating the Impact of Title

  12. Calculating the Impact of Title

  13. Predict – Who Has Title ? No Yes Yes No

  14. Conclusions of the Pará Study • Farmers were aware that having title increased the value of their property • Farmers assessed the costs and benefits of obtaining title (distance, etc.) • Farmers with title made significantly greater levels of investment in the productivity of their land • Securing and enforcing the property rights of the poor is an important step in improving their well-being

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